6 Ohio C.C. 357 | Oh. Circ. Ct. | 1892
The judgment under review is unquestionably right if the terms used in the statute of descents should, in all cases, receive their plain and natural meaning. Mrs. Sharkey died intestate and seized in fee of the lands in controversy. There is neither condition nor exception in the statute which provides that they should descend to her son.
But recent decisions by courts of much respectability affirm that, in cases of this character, there should be judicially added to statutes such conditions or provisions as may be necessary to avert results believed to be inconsistent with the legislative conscience, and, therefore, foreign to the legislative intent. Riggs v. Palmer, 115 N. Y. 506; Shellenberger v. Ransom, 47 N. W. Rep. 700. In Riggs v. Palmer, the court reached the conclusion that where a beneficiary under a will,
Ij; must be admitted that the most careful examination of Riggs v. Palmer fails to discover any clearly stated and clearly applicable principle justifying the decision. The spirit of fearless inquiry was exorcised early in the opinion, when every one contemplating a conclusion different from that reached by the majority, was warned that if he should persevere, it would be disparagingly said of him “ qui haeret in litera haeret in cortice.” The conclusion derives no support from the rule quoted from Bacon’s Abridgement: “ By an equitable construction, a ease not within the letter of the statute is sometimes holden to be within the meaning, because it is within the mischief for which a remedy is provided.”
The statute of descents neither recognizes a mischief nor provides a remidy. It is a legislative declara
There should be ho difficulty in distinguishing this case in which rights are vested by statute, from those cases in which the rights asserted have no foundation other than the fraudulent or unlawful conduct of a contracting party, nor from
In a state where, by organic law, the powers of government are located, and the modes of their exercise defined, and the judicial is carefully distinguished from the legislative power, there should be no assumption of judicial infallibility.
No inference favorable to the plaintiffs in error can be drawn from the supposed familiarity of the law makers with the principles of the civil law where, by an exception, they who murder their ancestors are excluded from the inheritance. The natural inference is that when they incorporated the general rule into the statute, and omitted the exception, they intended that there should be no exception to the rule of inheritance • prescribed.
If we felt at liberty to follow the example of the Court of Appeals of New York and to imagine the. legislators who enacted this statute sumznoned to oizr presence, and answering as “ upright and reasonable men ” — that is, of course, such men as we are — “ whether they intended to comprehend this case,” we might receive an affirmative answer accompanied by suggestive reasons. The same rule which we are asked to apply to the slayer and his mortgagees, if it be sound, should, out of respect for the logic of the law, in another ease, be applied to the innocent claiming to inherit through him. One who cannot inherit cannot be a medium of inheritance.
The provisions of the twelfth section of the Bill of Rights may have suggested the deliberate comprehension of this case within the provisions of the statute. “No conviction shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture of estate.” Certainly, the construction claimed by counsel’ for the plaintiffs in error would not involve a forfeiture of estate, for their contention is that no estate vested in the slayer. But the law makers may have entertained most serious doubt, if they contemplated the change in the statute which we are now asked to make; whether it would not contravene the constitutional provision as to the corruption of blood. Corruption of blood
The judgment is affirmed.